CALL FOR PAPERS: Teaching and Learning with AI through Metaliteracy

The Independent Journal of Teaching and Learning is seeking submissions for a special issue on Teaching and Learning with AI through Metaliteracy.

Prof. Thomas P. Mackey and Prof. Nicola Marae Allain from Empire State University have been invited to serve as guest editors for this thematic collection, which celebrates the 21st anniversary of this peer-reviewed international journal from South Africa. The journal brings together researchers and educators from around the world to share scholarship that advances teaching, learning, and educational practice.

We invite submissions of original research and reflective scholarship that explore how metaliteracy can inform teaching and learning with artificial intelligence. Contributions may examine theory, pedagogy, classroom practice, assessment, learner engagement, ethics, creativity, self-directed learning, or interdisciplinary applications across multimodal contexts.

As artificial intelligence continues to influence teaching and learning, and the production and sharing of knowledge, metaliteracy prepares learners for evolving information environments, including those mediated by AI. The metaliteracy model emphasizes learner agency through interconnected learning domains, learner roles, and learner characteristics. We welcome submissions that explore how these core components of metaliteracy can inform teaching and learning with AI across a wide range of educational settings.

Please see the full Call for Papers for submission guidelines, important dates, and the complete list of suggested topics. A downloadable PDF of the call is also available for sharing with colleagues.

Nicola and I look forward to bringing together a diverse collection of scholarship that explores innovative approaches to AI and metaliteracy from international perspectives.

Designing Interactive Pedagogies of Play Through Metaliteracy

Trudi Jacobson and Tom Mackey co-authored the chapter Designing Interactive Pedagogies of Play Through Metaliteracy for a new book edited by Marietjie Havenga, Jako Olivier, and Byron J Bunt. The open access volume entitled Problem-based Learning and Pedagogies of Play: Active Approaches Towards Self-Directed Learning is published by AOSIS Scholarly Books. As noted in the synopsis: “The focus of this book is original research regarding the implementation of problem-based learning and pedagogies of play as active approaches to foster self-directed learning” (https://books.aosis.co.za/index.php/ob/catalog/book/409).

According to the abstract for Trudi and Tom’s chapter:

This chapter explores interactive pedagogies of play (PoPs) through the theory and practice of metaliteracy. As a holistic pedagogical framework for developing reflective and self-directed learners in collaborative social environments, metaliteracy supports individuals to become active knowledge producers. The structure of the metaliteracy model includes interrelated roles, domains and characteristics that reinforce the scaffolding of play- and problem-based learning in multimodal contexts. The core components of metaliteracy are applied in practice through a set of flexible and adaptable goals and learning objectives. Through this analysis of metaliteracy concerning PoPs, we will describe interactive meaning-making in pedagogical situations involving collaborative problem-based learning (PBL) in four courses at both foundational and advanced levels of the college experience.

https://doi.org/10.4102/aosis.2023.BK409.

We are thrilled to be a part of this exciting new open access book with such excellent editors and authors. It was a great experience to apply metaliteracy to this new context of pedagogies of play. The examples we provide from our own teaching in the Writing and Critical Inquiry course at The University at Albany and in the Digital Media Arts courses at Empire State University demonstrate how applicable these ideas are to a wide range of pedagogical contexts. Let us know what you think about this new application of the metaliteracy model and feel free to try it out in your own teaching!

-Trudi and Tom

Jacobson, TE & Mackey, TP 2023, ‘Designing interactive pedagogies of play through
metaliteracy’, in M Havenga, J Olivier & BJ Bunt (eds.), Problem-based learning and pedagogies of play: Active approaches towards Self-Directed Learning, NWU Self-Directed Learning Series, vol. 11, AOSIS Books, Cape Town, pp. 43–70. https://doi.org/10.4102/aosis.2023.BK409.03